I notice a few of you are planning to see Pacific Rim twice. The last time I saw a movie in theaters twice was Slumdog Millionaire. First time I went by myself and the second time I saw it with my mom. If a friend wanted to go see it, I'd gladly see it again with said friend.

The only time I can recall seeing a movie twice in theaters (before Pacific Rim which I plan to see a second time later today) is Pocahontas which I saw with my parents and then later saw again with my sister.....I think because she wanted to see it and I didn't mind seeing it again, although it may have been because I wanted to see it.

So would you describe the movie as Wolverine's anime adventures though Japanland?

Not so much anime adventures as lets throw in everything the average person in the west thinks of when they hear the name Japan. with the exception of tentacles

Pretty much what I was inferring. I wouldn't expect Wolverine to pilot a giant robot or attend a Japanese highschool anyways (not like these things couldn't be done, especially since they've already been done to Spiderman and that X-Men 2000 cartoon/anime (kinda) respectfully) but I fully expected him to partake in the foreign and exotic mysteries of the Orient such as banging a geisha, fighting a Samurai, fighting a ninja army, begrudgingly eating sushi, getting schooled on how to drink tea, wearing a bathrobe like a Kimono, walking thought a Japanese Garden, fighting through a Japanese Garden, fighting with a Samurai's Katana, watching like a minute's worth of anime, and fighting Ninja Samurai Robots with a Katana, only stopping short of watching Godzilla destroy Tokyo.

Saw Pacific Rim a second time yesterday. Still love it, and I feel like I might have a better understanding of why I find the battles so entertaining. It is because the battles are not....repetitive? Tactics constantly change, they take advantage of the environment, they improvise constantly, and that makes the fights engaging and interesting.

I just saw Pacific Rim for the 2nd time as well. I went yesterday with my son and 2 of my brothers(1 have one more). I haven't seen a movie with them in over 20 years! I figured this was the perfect one for us all to see together, and it was. They both loved it. It was the 3D version, and I have to say it didn't look as bright or as clear as the normal version. I DID think the 3D was pretty well done. It was more used to add depth to scenes, rather then just throw things at you like so many others do.

Watched the 1979 version of 'Salem's Lot. Since I'm also currently listening to the book on audio at the moment, I had to inevitably compare the two. Anyway, the movie tries, but the pacing is terrible, with some scenes taking forever for no reason and some scenes going super fast for no reason. However the movie does get a gold star for great vamp design; them suckers are really creepy, especially Barlow. Loved the eye effects.

I saw the Pacific Rim in 3D and it's weird... you hardly remember the 3D effects at all in these movies...

unless it's Jackass 3D, which is the crowning achievement in cinema

I liked Harold and Kumar's implementation of 3D ---- as in your face as possible.

I like the 3D and all, but I stop noticing it after about 15 minutes unless they make a scene with like snow or dust or those weird glowing things in Avatar. So while cool, I'm old and conservative and I'm just as happy about not paying extra for it.

Saw Bad Teacher for the first time the other night. What a... weird movie. Almost all of the characters are... well, weird. Especially Timberlake's character (although the orgasm face he makes during a certain scene is both awesome and hilarious). I should expect such strangeness from a Jake Kasdan flick, but these people are offbeat, for sure. Anyone who has seen this will know what I mean. Don't get me wrong. It's not weird to the point that you're uncomfortable or anything. The movie is funny. Not side-splittingly funny, but it has its moments.

Anyway, I'm not a big fan of Diaz, but she does a great job here. Pulls off her role well. Lucy Punch also does well as a quirky goodie goodie teacher. Her mannerisms are awesome. I also think she's pretty hot... in her own way. Jason Segel's character is the funniest by far (through excellently witty dialogue), and also seems to be one of the more normal people in this flick.

In the end, I enjoyed it. Can I recommend it...? Not sure. There's nothing that ground breaking, or memorable about it. However, it's pretty funny at times, and is well acted. It's definitely not awful (lol).

I saw the Wolverine. I liked it a lot, though I have to say, it makes a good case for the negative portrayal of Asian Men in American media as cowardly, petty, and without honor; Wolverine, by contrast, was strong, brave, and honorable, so of course all the Asian girls wanted the awesome foreigner.

The most egregious part came when Wolverine chewed out Noburo for cheating on his fiancÚ... despite sleeping with her the very night before. Wat.

Kind of seemed a little inside out for a Happy Madison movie. It wasn't exactly hilarious, but a few parts made me chuckle and the story played out really well for a typical rising underdog sports movie.